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India, wonderful reddis dynasty

Beautiful are the temples that the Reddis realized in Ghanpur (Ghampur, or Ghanapur), as well as in Palampet, during the Kakatya domination of Warangal, around 1250 AD.
Bellissimi sono i templi che i Reddis realizzarono a Ghanpur (Ghampur, o Ghanapur), oltre che a Palampet, durante la dominazione Kakatya di Warangal, intorno al 1250 dC circa.

In ancient Andhradesa, more or less the current territory of Telangane and Andhra Pradesh, Prince Kakatiya Prola I (1052 – 1076) was referred to as “Prola Reddi” in an inscription after the Kakatiya became independent sovereigns. It is known that the various subordinate heads under their dominion used the title of: Reddi. They faithfully served the Kakatya kingdom, administering various territories, some of which settled there permanently. Subsequently, in the fourteenth century some Reddys created their own kingdom in Andhradesa for about a century.

And, on the stirrups of the columns at the entrance of the temple, there are high statues Salabanjikas and lions, rampants above small elephants, similar to those in Palampet.
– E sulle staffe delle colonne all’ingresso del tempio, dove stanno alte statue di Salabanjikas e di leoni Yali , rampanti sopra piccoli elefanti, simili a quelli presenti a Palampet.